"A lot of writers take ten years to turn out one book," Braver said. "How do you write so quickly, so prolifically, and so well?"

"I don't sleep!"

His real secret may be solitude. Roth, now 77, has few distractions from his work on the sprawling rural Connecticut property where he lives alone.

He says it does get lonely sometimes.

"So, what do you do then? Just go back in the city?" asked Braver.

"No. Just get over it."

He may get over it, but many of his characters - like those in his latest book - are not so lucky.

"Usually, your main characters, the people who are really driving the story, they don't end up happy," Braver said. "And not just in marriage, but just in life they don't end up very happy."

"Well, a lot of people don't end up happy," he said.

"Do you not believe in 'happily ever after'?" Braver asked.

"No, I don't believe in that phrase," Roth said. "I'm interested in people when they're not happy."

And unhappy characters have served Philip Roth well.

His first book, "Goodbye, Columbus," about the guy who doesn't get the girl, grabbed the National Book Award.

And "Portnoy's Complaint," his blockbuster novel ten years later, grabbed something else - national attention. "Portnoy's," which became a movie, introduced Roth's now-trademark frankness about a subject that NOBODY talked about (masturbation).

Remember: This was some 40 years ago!

"There aren't a lot of writers who write with as much candor and humor about sex [as you]," raver said. "Why has that been such a recurring topic for you?"

"Sex is important," Roth said. "And sex plays a big part in people's lives. Plays a huge part in their imaginations. Plays a huge part in their fantasies. And therefore, it's a subject for writing."

Roth says, just before the book was published, he took his Mom and Dad out to lunch to prepare them for all the controversy that he confidently predicted would soon swirl around them and their son, the writer.

Roth recounts that years later, his father told him: "'You know what happened when we got in the taxi cab?' 'What,' I said. He said, 'Your mother began to cry. And she said, 'He has delusions of grandeur!'"

Roth insists his parents were NOT the models for Portnoy's unlikable Mom and dad. His loving mother, a homemaker, and his father, a successful insurance salesman, raised two sons.

Braver asked Roth what he was like as a kid: "Oh, adorable!" he laughed.

"When did you start wanting to be a writer?"

"I think in college," Roth said. "I began to write very bad, very sensitive stories. And I wrote those through college."

His writing has evolved, but one central theme remains constant:

"You are a secular writer, but religion or people of the Jewish faith just seem to be characters in your books," Braver said. "Why is that?"

"Well, those are the people I knew. If I grew up in Minneapolis, I would've written about the people in Minneapolis. I grew up in the southwest corner of Newark, New Jersey. And there were mostly Jews."

"Do you consider yourself a religious person?"

"No, I don't have a religious bone in my body," Roth said.

"You don't?"

"No."

"So, do you feel like there's a God out there?" Braver asked.

"I'm afraid there isn't, no," Roth said.

"You know that telling the whole world that you don't believe in God is going to, you know, have people say, 'Oh my goodness, you know, that's a terrible thing for him to say," Braver said.

Roth replied, "When the whole world doesn't believe in God, it'll be a great place."

Blunt talk from a guy who himself has been bluntly assessed by his ex-wife, British actress Claire Bloom, who described Roth as "a hostile man" in a scalding memoir after their 1995 divorce.

"Your former wife, Clara Bloom, claimed that you don't even like women," Braver said.

"Let's forget that," Roth said.

"You don't want to talk about her?"

"No. No."

"That was a bad episode in your life?"

"No. I don't, I don't want to comment on libels."

Even during rocky personal times, Philip Roth has kept writing, at the surprising pace, he told us, of only one page a day. But they've been good pages.

In the 1990s, four of his novels won major American writing awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for "American Pastoral."

"That must have impressed even you?" Braver asked.

"I liked it!" he laughed. "I began to get used to it!"

"Did it make you happy?" Braver asked. "Did it make you a little cocky for a while?"

"No, it felt good. It's good. It's nice to win prizes, yeah. The child in one is very excited."

Yet, though he says he will never stop writing, the chronicler of Newark insists he's unconcerned about how he'll be remembered.

"What would you hope that your legacy would be, with all of these books that you've written over these many years?"